Alcohol and minors: nearly nine out of ten supermarkets break the law, according to an association

Alcohol and minors: nearly nine out of ten supermarkets break the law, according to an association

July 4, 2025

Nearly nine out of ten supermarkets are breaking the law by selling alcohol to minors, according to tests conducted in Nantes, Angers and Rennes, according to the Addictions France association, which on Thursday called for "truly dissuasive sanctions" and frequent inspections by the State.

Of 90 establishments belonging to the Auchan, Lidl, Leclerc, Diagonal, U Express, Intermarché, Carrefour (City, Market, and Express), Monoprix, Franprix, and G20 brands tested in April and May, 86% sold alcohol to minors, according to the association. This compares to 93% during a similar operation in 2021.

"Despite the formal ban on the sale of alcohol to minors and the government's commitment to better enforce it, access to alcohol remains very easy for minors in 2025," Myriam Savy, head of advocacy at Addictions France, told AFP.

For these tests, minors went, accompanied by a bailiff, to supermarkets, some of which had "already been the subject of reports." Only 8% of the establishments asked for identification.

However, Article L.3342-1 of the Public Health Code specifies that "the person who delivers the drink requires the customer to provide proof of their majority" via a "systematic act", "not conditioned by simple doubt about the customer's physical appearance", recalls Addictions France.

These test purchases "were systematically made in the middle of the day, during the week," often "with few or no customers at the checkout," the association specifies, to forestall the argument of "pressure linked to crowds" to justify the lack of age checks.

Of the 25 Carrefour stores tested, only two refused to sell, as did two of the 11 Lidl stores tested, as did two of the seven Coopérative U group stores visited. Among the other brands, only one E.Leclerc store out of six refused to sell to the minor, only one Intermarché store out of seven, none of the six Monoprix stores tested, and none of the two Auchan stores.

In the summer of 2023, the association tested 42 bars, cafes and fast food outlets in Loire-Atlantique: only one refused to sell to minors.

Its findings in 2023-2024 led to the opening of 37 legal proceedings, the first of which "will not be argued until December 9, 2025": this two-year delay "reinforces a feeling of impunity and trivializes the transgression of the law," judges Addictions France.

– “Truly dissuasive” sanctions –

Faced with the "general ineffectiveness of the current regulatory system" and the "Charter of Responsible Commitments" signed by large-scale distribution in 2019, in partnership with the Federation of Commerce and Distribution, the association is calling for systematic random checks by the State, and "truly dissuasive" sanctions.

With fines of up to 2% of the company's annual turnover if it is less than 100,000 euros, and 10% from 500,000 euros, with systematic recourse to administrative sanctions (warning, suspension, license withdrawal after two repeat offenses). Dedicated resources would allow these offenses to be judged within six weeks.

Because while selling alcohol to a minor is an offense punishable by a fine of 7,500 euros, double that amount for a repeat offense within five years, today "checks are rare, prosecutions are infrequent, and convictions up to the maximum penalty are virtually non-existent," states Addictions France.

On Thursday, a Carrefour spokesperson assured AFP that "the majority of (its) stores are respecting" this ban, adding that it would "remind its employees once again" of it, while Casino promised to broadcast in its stores "a firm message of respect for this ban."

"The re-awareness campaign will be extremely strong," Coopérative U CEO Dominique Schelcher told BFMTV/RMC. "Our hosts and checkout staff must be exemplary on this issue; we have no room for error."

In comparison, in Switzerland, which combines prevention, frequent random checks and dissuasive sanctions, 65% of sellers checked the age of buyers in 2023, compared to 54% in 2014, according to the association.

In July 2024, the Pau Court of Appeal upheld the Lidl chain's €5,000 fine for selling alcohol to a 16-year-old minor, Kilian, who was killed in Urrugne (Pyrénées Atlantiques) in 2021 by hitting a pylon on his scooter after being hit by a friend, also drunk, riding his scooter.

Lidl has appealed to the Court of Cassation.

en_USEnglish